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Articles |
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Mary Beth Baker |
Nathan Hale: Icon of Innocence |
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Richard Moss |
Jewish Farmers, Ethnic Identity, and
Institutional Americanization in Turn-of-the-Century Connecticut
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Adam Wolkoff |
Creating a Suburban Ghetto: Public Housing at
New Haven’s West Rock, 1945-1979 |
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William F. Sullivan, Jr. |
Battle for the
Brass City: The Waterbury Strike of 1919 |
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Essays |
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Timothy Collins |
The Hessian
Elm: The Revolutionary Memoir of a Tree |
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Judi Houpert |
Voices of Connecticut Veterans: Don Moss and
an Artist’s View of War |
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The Connecticut
Curriculum |
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John Day Tully |
Debating a Hero: Nathan Hale |
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Mary Beth Baker |
Nathan Hale: The Documents |
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Matthew Warshauer |
Nathan on the
Web: A Review of Internet Resources |
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Lisa Sillitto |
Connecticut Connections: The Hale Homestead |
| Exhibitions Reviews
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Mystic Seaport, Black
Hands, Blue Seas: The Maritime Heritage of African Americans.
Reviewed by Kazimieri Koslowski |
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Noah Webster House & West
Hartford Historical Society, Bristow: Putting the Pieces of an
African-American Life Together.
Reviewed by Rebecca Furer |
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Lyman Allyn Museum,
Commerce and Culture: Architecture and Society on New London's State
Street.
Reviewed by William Hosley |
| Exhibitions of Interest |
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Book Reviews |
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Nancy Hathaway Steenburg,
Children and the Criminal Law in Connecticut, 1635-1855: Changing
Perceptions of Childhood.
Reviewed by Christopher W. Schmidt |
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James Lomuscio,
Village of the Dammed: The Fight For Open Space and the Flooding of
a Connecticut Town.
Reviewed by Raechel Guest |
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Preston Maynard and
Marjorie B. Noyes, eds., Carriages and Clocks, Corsets and Locks:
The Rise and Fall of an Industrial City – New Haven, Connecticut.
Reviewed by Robert Wolff |
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David A. Weir, Early
New England: A Covenanted Society
Reviewed by Ulrich Kirchberger |
| Noteworthy Books |
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